Earthen mounds in the Głubczyce Forest (SW Poland) – are they prehistoric long-barrows? Geoarchaeology of the Silesian soil record and human-environment interplay in the Holocene

Author:

Krupski Mateusz1,Mackiewicz Maksym2,Kabała Cezary3,Ehlert Maciej4,Cendrowska Marzena4

Affiliation:

1. Archeolodzy.org Foundation Bolesława Prusa 81/3i, 50-316 Wrocław, Poland Institute of Soil Science and Environmental Protection, Wrocław University of Environmental and Life Sciences, Grunwaldzka 53, 50-357 Wrocław Wrocław Poland

2. Archeolodzy.org Foundation Bolesława Prusa 81/3i, 50-316 Wrocław, Poland; Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology, University of Warsaw, Prosta 69, 00-838 Warszawa Warszawa Poland

3. Institute of Soil Science and Environmental Protection Wrocław University of Environmental and Life Sciences, Grunwaldzka 53, 50-357 Wrocław Wrocław Poland

4. Archeolodzy.org Foundation Bolesława Prusa 81/3i, 50-316 Wrocław Wrocław Poland

Abstract

Abstract Two earthen mounds, trapezoid in shape, oriented along the W-E/NW-SE axis and located in prominent landscape positions, were recently discovered in the Głubczyce Forest in the loess area of the Głubczyce Plateau (SW Poland). Their resemblance to long-barrows of the Funnel Beaker culture, as yet unknown in this part of Silesia prompted low-invasive research, involving ALS data analysis, magnetic prospection and a study of soil properties. The objective was to determine if these are indeed anthropogenic structures and if so, how and when were they built. The results indicate: 1) a transformation from chernozemic (Phaeozem) to clay-illuvial soil (Luvisol/Retisol) in the Głubczyce Forest area. Similar processes were identified in neighbouring Central European loess regions and linked with prehistoric climate/vegetation changes (the spread of dense, beech-dominant forests). Human management of the landscape (involving sustained deforestation), enabled the patchy preservation of chernozemic soils until the present-day, 2) both mounds are anthropogenic features, built on a Phaeozem using chernozemic soil. Their construction occurred before the soil transformation, i.e. most likely in prehistory. The development of the Głubczyce Forest may have taken place during the Migration period – a time of settlement decline in Silesia, and 3) the Głubczyce Forest bears further traces of anthropogenic activity: ancient agriculture (field systems), funerary practices, forest management and WWII combat.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Archeology,Archeology

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